A lot of students don't think that examples like these count as plagiarism. But they're wrong.

This is a sample video from a video tutorial course titled "How to Cite Sources and Avoid Plagiarism".

Here's the table of contents:

Part 1: What is Plagiarism?1.1 Plagiarism: the Basic Definition1.2 Downloading or Buying Whole Papers1.3 Cutting and Pasting from Several Sources1.4 Changing Some Words but Copying Whole Phrases1.5 Paraphrasing Without Attribution1.6 The Debate Over "Patchwriting"

Part 2: How to Cite Sources2.1 When Should I Cite a Source?2.2 What Needs to be Cited?2.3 How to Cite: Mark the Boundaries2.4 Citing Exact Words2.5 Citing a Longer Quotation2.6 Citing a Source But Not Quoting2.7 A Comment About "Common Knowledge"2.8 Citation Styles: MLA, APA, CSE, Chicago, Turabian, oh my!